Why it exists
Eye movement teaching becomes easier when learners can see the sign move, compare it with related findings, and connect it to clinical context without leaving the teaching surface.
GazeAtlas gives NeuroGaze a clear public home: what the simulator is, who it is for, how access works, and what its educational boundary is.
Eye movement teaching becomes easier when learners can see the sign move, compare it with related findings, and connect it to clinical context without leaving the teaching surface.
NeuroGaze is an educational simulator and source-backed teaching model. Expert review done by Dr Prateek Porwal. It is not for diagnosis or treatment.
Built for supervised medical, vestibular, ENT, neuro-ophthalmology, optometry, and audiology education.
Pairs animated signs with plain teaching text, expert surfaces, and review-oriented structure.
Designed to support teaching. Clinical care still requires qualified assessment and judgment.
GazeAtlas does not present NeuroGaze as a diagnostic or treatment product. It does not promise patient outcomes, replace examination, or make patient-specific decisions.
That boundary keeps the public website aligned with the simulator's purpose: responsible, supervised clinical education.